Robert Mohr (rugby)

Robert Mohr
Full name Robert Mohr
Date of birth (1978-08-25) 25 August 1978
Place of birth Hannover, Germany
Height 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 111 kg (17 st 7 lb)
Rugby union career
Position(s) Number eight
Senior career
Years Team Apps (Points)
? – 2002
2002 – 2012
2012 – 2013
France Bourgoin
France La Rochelle
France Niort
3
191
(0)
(25)
Correct as of 24 June 2012
National team(s)
Years Team Apps (Points)
2008 – 2014  Germany ()
National team(s)
Years Team Comps

Robert Mohr (born 25 August 1978) is a retired German international rugby union player, having played professionally in France for Bourgoin, La Rochelle and Stade Niortais and for the German national rugby union team. He is one of the few players in the German team who is a professional.[1]

Biography

Mohr was born in Hannover on 25 August 1978.[2]

He played for CS Bourgoin-Jallieu in the Heineken Cup in 1999–2000.[3]

Mohr scored a try in Germany's home game against Spain in the qualifying for the 2007 Rugby World Cup, which the team won.[4]

The German rugby federation repeatedly tried to have Mohr released for the team but his club refused despite being obliged to.[1]

Mohr and his club, La Rochelle, finished in the top five of the French second division in each season from 2007 through 2010. After failing to earn promotion in the first three seasons, losing in the promotion semi-finals in 2008 and 2009 and in the final in 2007, the club finally broke through with a win over Lyon in the 2010 promotion final. After ten years with La Rochelle he announced his departure from the club in 2012. Being thought after by German club DSV 78 Hannover he decided to stay in France and join third division side Stade Niortais instead.[5] He played his last competitive rugby match on 6 April 2013, when he fielded for Germany against Sweden in a 73–17 victory. Mohr retired after this match from international and club rugby and will work for a drink vending machine manufacturer and also act as a talent scout for La Rochelle.[6] He however returned to the German team one more time in May 2014 in the decisive world cup qualifier against Russia which Germany lost.[7]

He was part of Germany's 7's side at the 2009 Hannover Sevens.[8]

Honours

Club

Stats

Robert Mohr's personal statistics in club and international rugby:[9][10]

Club

Year Club Division Games Points Place
2001–02 CS Bourgoin-Jallieu Top 16 3 0
2005–06 La Rochelle Rugby Pro D2 29 0 8th
2006–07 30 10 3rd
2007–08 29 5 5th
2008–09 28 10 4th
2009–10 30 0 3rd – Promoted
2010–11 Top 14 16 0 13th – Relegated
2011–12 Rugby Pro D2 28 0 5th
2012–13 Stade Niortais Federale 1 16 0

National team

Year Team Competition Games Points Place
2008–2010 Germany European Nations Cup First Division 4 0 6th – Relegated
2010–2012 Germany European Nations Cup Division 1B 2 0 4th
2012–2014 Germany European Nations Cup Division 1B 4 5 ongoing

References

  1. 1 2 Die Wucht der Gegner Sueddeutsche Zeitung – Article on the German rugby team, published: 12 February 2008, accessed: 5 March 2009
  2. Robert Mohr at scrum.com accessed: 5 March 2009
  3. Robert Mohr stats at ercrugby.com accessed: 5 March 2009
  4. Germany wins first round published: 14 May 2006, accessed: 5 March 2009
  5. Robert Mohr verlässt La Rochelle (in German) totslrugby.de, published: 22 June 2012, accessed: 24 June 2012
  6. – Schweden: Robert Mohr bestreitet letztes Spiel / Startaufstellung unverändert (in German) totslrugby.de, published: 6 April 2013, accessed: 7 April 2013
  7. Deutschland kämpft in Hamburg gegen Russland um das WM-Ticket (in German) Hamburger Abendblatt, published: 23 May 2014, accessed: 25 May 2014
  8. Deutschland Sevens: Diese 12 sollens richten (in German) Hannover Sevens website, accessed: 2 March 2010
  9. Robert Mohr profile at totalrugby.de (in German) accessed: 25 February 2010
  10. Mohr Robert player stats (in French) accessed: 25 February 2010
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.